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Humanity AI Open Call for Shaping AI for the Public Good is sponsored by Humanity AI (Ford Foundation, MacArthur Foundation, Doris Duke Foundation, Lumina Foundation, Kapor Foundation, Mellon Foundation, Mozilla Foundation, Omidyar Network, David and Lucile Packard Foundation, Siegel Family Endowment).
Humanity AI is a $500 million, five-year pooled-fund initiative co-led by the Ford Foundation, MacArthur Foundation, Omidyar Network and seven other major U. S. foundations to shape artificial intelligence for the public good.
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Humanity AI Announces More Than $18 Million in New Grants to Shape AI for the Public Good - Ford Foundation Humanity AI Announces More Than $18 Million in New Grants to Shape AI for the Public Good Pooled philanthropic fund awards $8 million to 12 inaugural grantee organizations, with an additional $10 million committed to a forthcoming open call.
New York – Humanity AI, a collaborative philanthropic initiative dedicated to ensuring artificial intelligence (AI) serves the public good, today announced more than $18 million in new pooled grants. This includes grants to 12 organizations whose work spans the most urgent frontiers of AI’s impact on society, including safeguarding democratic institutions, protecting workers’ rights, strengthening journalism, and advancing education.
Even as the adoption of and investment in AI continues to accelerate, a growing number of Americans are expressing concern about the technology and its role in our society, and who is guiding its governance. A June 2025 survey by Pew Research found that half of U.S. adults say the increased use of AI in daily life makes them feel more concerned than excited.
Additional research by Pew found that more than half of U.S. adults (55%) say they want more control over how it is used in their lives. “As people’s tolerance for unchecked technologies gives way to a demand for greater agency, we must embed fundamental rights into the design, deployment, and governance of technology that impacts our lives,” said Lori McGlinchey, director of the Technology and Society program at the Ford Foundation.
“This is a generational moment for philanthropy to pool resources and empower talented people working to align technology with our democratic values. By investing in these inaugural grantees, Humanity AI is shaping a future where technology serves the public good and honors the inherent dignity of every individual and family.
” Humanity AI grantees represent an interconnected and diverse portfolio of organizations, all working to ensure AI is built and governed in ways that puts people first.
Each grant recipient has already established the deep ability to shape the conversation on AI and is poised to have even greater impact: AI Now Institute – $500,000 to accelerate policy research and strategies to address accountability for AI’s impacts on labor, climate and government.
Center for Democracy and Technology – $500,000 to advance civil rights and civil liberties in the digital age through advocacy, legislative, and regulatory engagement. Center on Resilience & Digital Justice – $500,000 to focus on deep and lasting public impact that foregrounds accountability and repair from extant and emerging digital and AI harms.
Council on Foreign Relations LEAD AI – $500,000 to generate policy-relevant ideas and analysis and promote informed public discussion of consequential AI issues facing the U.S. and the world. Distributed AI Research (DAIR) Institute – $500,000 to connect community-driven researchers to build grassroots knowledge and power to shape the future of AI.
Kinfolk Tech – $500,000 to reimagine how people remember through art, technology and collective power. Partnership on AI – $500,000 to provide a meeting ground for academics, civil society, industry and media to undertake collaborative research and create solutions so that AI advances positive outcomes for people and society.
Pulitzer Center – $500,000 to connect and equip journalists around the world to report on AI with skill, nuance, and impact. Student Defense – $500,000 to SHAPE AI (Safeguarding Higher Ed through AI Practices and Ethics), which brings together leaders and practitioners to develop practical guidance for institutions navigating AI adoption, with a focus on under-resourced schools.
TechEquity – $500,000 to hold the technology industry accountable for building widespread economic prosperity — and for the consequences it generates. In addition to the organizational grants, Humanity AI is awarding $3 million to support the creation of AI Civics, which Data & Society is leading, to address the fundamental question: How can communities have a voice in directing the creation, deployment, and use of AI?
The initiative’s first phase will bring communities together in libraries across the country through a partnership with the Digital Public Library of America .
The work of these grantees is mutually reinforcing: policy research strengthens accountability; giving voice to communities shapes the standards for how AI is developed; investigative journalism holds powerful actors to account; practical guidance helps institutions adopt AI responsibly; and grassroots knowledge-sharing ensures the people whom AI impacts the most have agency to shape its trajectory.
Together, these investments support the creation and promotion of spaces for the public to imagine what AI can and should be, open new areas of exploration through signature projects, and fund the research and storytelling that make the case for an AI industry that works for people — not just profit. For more information about Humanity AI and the inaugural grantees, visit humanityai. ai .
This summer, Humanity AI will launch a $10 million open call to identify and support more organizations working at the frontiers of AI and the public interest. Because the communities closest to AI’s impact often hold the clearest vision for what a more equitable future requires, Humanity AI is committed to ensuring that the bold leaders and organizations best positioned to meet this moment have the support they need.
Humanity AI will share details about the open call, including areas of focus, application timeline, and criteria in the coming months. The Humanity AI founding partners are the Doris Duke Foundation , Ford Foundation , Lumina Foundation , Kapor Foundation , John D. and Catherine T.
MacArthur Foundation , Mellon Foundation , Mozilla Foundation , Omidyar Network , David and Lucile Packard Foundation , and Siegel Family Endowment . The Ford Foundation is an independent organization working to address inequality and build a future grounded in justice.
For 90 years, it has supported visionaries on the frontlines of social change worldwide, guided by its mission to strengthen democratic values, reduce poverty and injustice, promote international cooperation, and advance human achievement. Today, with an endowment of $16 billion, the foundation has headquarters in New York and 10 regional offices across Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the Middle East. Learn more at www.
fordfoundation. org .
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: U. S. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The current listing shows up to $10 million committed to the forthcoming open call. Inaugural cohort of 12 grantees received $500,000 each, with one $3 million grant awarded for an AI Civics initiative. The overall Humanity AI initiative is a $500 million, five-year pooled-fund commitment from ten foundations. Verify award ceilings, matching requirements, and allowable costs in the official notice.
Humanity AI Open Call for Shaping AI for the Public Good is funded by Humanity AI (Ford Foundation, MacArthur Foundation, Doris Duke Foundation, Lumina Foundation, Kapor Foundation, Mellon Foundation, Mozilla Foundation, Omidyar Network, David and Lucile Packard Foundation, Siegel Family Endowment). Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
Yes — this listing is flagged as national in scope, so applicants across the U.S. may apply, subject to the sponsor's other eligibility criteria.
Start from the official opportunity page linked in this listing — it carries the sponsor's submission instructions.
Academic Grant Program (NVIDIA) is sponsored by NVIDIA. NVIDIA's Academic Grant Program seeks proposals from full-time faculty members at accredited academic institutions who are using NVIDIA technology to advance work in Simulation and Modeling, Data Science, and Robotics and Edge AI. Proposals should incorporate pretrained models from ai.nvidia.com and/or make extensive use of NVIDIA software distributions.
This NOFO provides an opportunity to all FY 2018 NIST SBIR Phase I awardees to submit a Phase II application following completion of Phase I. This NOFO provides instructions for FY 2019 NIST SBIR Phase II application preparation and submission requirements. In Phase II, work from Phase I that exhibits potential for commercial application is further developed. Phase II is the R&D or prototype development phase. To apply for a Phase II award, each Phase I awardee will be required to submit a comprehensive application outlining the proposed research and a detailed plan to commercialize the final product. Each NIST Phase II award is for up to $400,000 and up to a 24-month period of performance. One year after completing the Phase II R&D activity, the awardee shall be required to report on its commercialization activities. Up to an additional $6,500 may be requested for Technical and Business Assistance (TABA); see Section 5.11 for more information about TABA. Funding Opportunity Number: 2019-NIST-SBIR-02. Assistance Listing: 11.620. Funding Instrument: CA. Category: ST. Award Amount: Up to $400K per award.
NVIDIA Graduate Fellowship Program is a grant from NVIDIA providing up to $60,000 per award to PhD students conducting research that advances accelerated computing and its applications. Now in its 25th year, the program invites nominations from doctoral students pushing the boundaries of artificial intelligence, robotics, autonomous vehicles, and related fields. Recipients receive not only research funding but also access to NVIDIA technology, products, and engineering expertise, along with a mandatory in-person summer internship. Students are nominated by their faculty advisors and selected based on academic achievement and research area alignment.
Ten foundations pledged $500M over five years for responsible AI. Who is funding what, when grants open, and how to position your proposal.
Read articleTen foundations — Ford, MacArthur, Mellon, Mozilla, Omidyar, Doris Duke, Lumina, Kapor, Packard, and Siegel — committed $500M over five years to Humanity AI in October 2025. On May 12, 2026, the collaborative made its inaugural bet: $18M to nine organizations at $500K each plus a $3M AI Civics initiative led by Data & Society and Digital Public Library of America. A $10M open call lands this summer. Here's who got funded, who was conspicuously left out, what the open-call criteria are likely to look like, and how mission-aligned nonprofits should position now.
Read articleDoris Duke, Ford, Lumina, Kapor, MacArthur, Mellon, Mozilla, Omidyar, Packard, and Siegel pooled $18M into Humanity AI on May 12. Twelve inaugural grantees got $500K each. A $10M open call lands this summer. A complete strategic analysis for nonprofits, researchers, and community-led groups planning to apply.
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